Friday, October 12, 2012

Two Very Different Oct. 12 Anniversaries

O Trinity of love and power!Our brethren shield in danger's hour; From rock and tempest, fire and foe, Protect them wheresoe'er they go;Thus evermore shall rise to TheeGlad hymns of praise from land and sea..Verse 4, “Eternal Father” – The Navy Hymn

Today, Oct. 12, is the 520th anniversary of Columbus’ discovery of the New World.It is also the more somber anniversary of the U.S.S. Cole bombing by terrorists in the Port of Aden in Yemen on Oct. 12, 2000.

Columbus Day has been turned into a “Monday Holiday.”One day, no one will remember the exact date Columbus landed in the Caribbean, which is the real object of Monday holidays.Originally, it was a holiday for Italians, as St. Patrick’s Day was a holiday for the Irish six months earlier.There were so many Italian immigrants that a day off to celebrate made sense.

Now, not so much, though the Media still makes note of it.Columbus has become a much-maligned hero, robber of gold, exploiter and enslaver of Indians, and so forth.In a time when American exceptionalism is being forced under the waves, it’s natural that the first European to set foot on the shores of the North American continent should go down with the ship.

Yet, the voyage of the Nina, the Pinta and the Santa Maria was an extraordinary act of courage.The tiny vessels bobbing on the turbulent Atlantic sailed at a speed of about 4 miles per hour.This son of a Genoan weaver embarked on the journey against all common sense and the scientific knowledge of the times, which held that the world was flat.He believed the world was round and set out to prove, searching for a new route to the riches of the East Indies.

He was later arrested for mismanagement of the colony and sent back to Spain in chains for the death of the ringleader of a revolt and assassination attempt.But it was his initial voyage that we best remember a commemorate; his confusion at what he thought was the shifting of the pole star, but was actually the compass needle shifting; the site of pelicans on board his ship, which he knew could not fly more than 200 miles from land, at best; his estimation that he was approaching Cipango (Japan) when he was actually in the vicinity of the Bahamas.

His men were losing patience; they wanted to return to Spain before their food and water ran out completely.As he was arguing, cajoling and remonstrating his crew, logs, stalks of rose berries, and most importantly, hand-carved wooden objects floated by. Even more amazingly, he and a crewman spotted a moving point of light in the distance.

They waited the night in suspense.At daybreak, they caught sight of the island the Indians called “Guanahani” what we know as San Salvador.Columbus took the royal standard (the Banner of Castile) ashore, and claiming the land for Spain, knelt down and said a prayer of thanks.The 43-day voyage had been successful.

Over 500 years later, a ship sailing in the opposite direction, bearing the American flag, the U.S. Navy destroyer U.S.S. Cole was harbored in the Yemen Port of Aden.As it sat at anchor refueling, under the command of Commander Kirk Lippold, a small craft approached the port side of the destroyer around 11:18 local time.An explosion occurred, creating a 40 by 40 foot gash in the ship’s port side.The blast appeared to be caused by explosives molded into a shaped charge against the hull of the boat.The blast hit the ship’s galley, where the crew was lining up for lunch.Seventeen sailors were killed and 39 injured in the explosion.

The crew fought flooding in the engineering spaces for three days.Divers inspecting the hull determined that the keel (the spine of the ship) was not damaged.Intelligence determined that Al Qaeda in Saudi Arabia was responsible for the suicide attack.Nine months earlier, they attempted a similar attack on the U.S. Navy destroyer USS The Sullivans, as a part of the 2000 millennium attack plots.Fortunately, the attacking vessel was so overloaded with explosives that it sank before the attack could be carried out.

A U.S. judge has held Sudan liable for the attack, while another has released over $13 million in Sudanese frozen assets to the relatives of those killed aboard the U.S.S. Cole.

Let us not forget that first sailor who set foot in the New World, opening the passage for freedom and prosperity on this date, nor those 17 who died, some 500 years later, protecting that same freedom.

Joe Biden: Official Mascot of the Democrat Party

After watching last night’s vice
presidential debate between Paul Ryan and Joe Biden, all I can say of Joe Biden
is this:what a jackass.No wonder the donkey is the mascot of the
Democrat party.What a jerk.

He was rude, smarmy, arrogant,
condescending, snarky, mocking, disrespectful, and wrong about so much.He was said to have interrupted Paul Ryan
between 80 and 90 times during the 90 minute debate.That would be just about every minute.

The funny thing is, Biden might
have won the debate if he’d just followed the rules of courtesy, instead of hee-hawing like a provincial schoolboy.Independents would have been in agreement
with him about the cost of the wars in the Middle East, although he was wrong
about the expense scale:our highest
budget item is social entitlements.

The Independents would probably
agree with him that Afghanistan should fight its own wars.Period.(That was another problem with Biden; it wasn’t his place to decide when
a debate was over).If the reason for
our being in Afghanistan was the ostensible, public argument:to get Bin Laden (who was actually in
Pakistan), his argument might have been valid.But the real reason for our being in Afghanistan was to doing China’s
dirty work in clearing out the Taliban, to make rare-mineral mining easier for
the Chinese.What he should have said
was, “Let China fight her own wars.”

Meanwhile, Paul Ryan missed some
opportunities, though in general his arguments were clear, concise, considered
and well-delivered.He must have been
coached on Biden’s provocative attempts to draw him into an angry debate.However, he could have easily answered Biden’s
charge that he voted for Medicare D under the Bush Administration by pointing
out that so did Biden.

Where Biden then charged Ryan
with supporting the Medicare (and Social Security) programs the GOP opposed,
Ryan could have even more easily pointed out that it was the Democrats who
first got the American people addicted to these costly programs, leaving the
Republicans with the task of finding a way to pay for it and phase it out
without hurting the workers who had paid for these programs through their
income taxes and were naturally expecting the pay-out they were promised.Ryan needn’t have feared Biden’s wrath; he
would have sounded compassionate and sensible.

Ryan is young
and not as experienced at taking on snakes like Biden, although he was well
aware of Biden’s reputation in the Senate for his nastiness.Biden harped on Ryan in every statement,
complaining that Ryan was taking more than his allotted time.That was the one time Ryan did come back at
him, reminding Biden the reason for the extra time was because he kept
interrupting.This one come-back
resulted in the bickering exchange that Ryan’s coaches probably warned him
about, and why he avoided making them.

When Biden wasn’t
interrupting Ryan directly, he was talking to himself, cackling, shaking his
head, gesturing, and performing every distraction in the book to interrupt Ryan’s
train of thought and the audience’s attention on what Ryan was saying.Ryan, to his credit, soldiered on.Someone must have gestured to Biden to knock
it off, because towards the end, he began to behave himself a little
better.He resorted to quietly sulking,
instead.

Substantively,
Biden had a rather ridiculous argument about Iran’s stockpiling of
uranium.They have the ore, but not the
means to develop it.Iran doesn’t but
North Korea, China and Russia do have the guidance systems necessary to deliver
the bombs.We shouldn’t take Biden’s
word for it that they don’t have it any more than his claim that the
Administration didn’t know that the Libyan embassy needed more security.Even Humphrey Bogart – with a little help
from Katherine Hepburn – was able to fashion a torpedo out of some oxygen takes
in The African Queen.A nuclear guidance
system is a bit more sophisticated, but Iran should be able to find one in a
government garage sale in Russia.An
older version perhaps, but it’ll get the job done.

We already know
they’ve been testing weapons and submarines in the Mediterranean.When the moderator, Martha Raddatz, questioned
him on this claim, Biden backed off, saying, “Oh I didn’t say that.”Yes, he did.Then he had the nerve to say that the facts mattered and later, “Let’s
keep our eye on the ball.”Except, of course,
when Ryan was trying to speak.

“Let’s all calm
down here,” Biden magnanimously urged, even though he was the candidate doing
all the shouting, pointing, gesticulating, and fist-pounding.His hypocrisy was on plain display for all of
America to witness.He accused Ryan of
supporting cuts to embassy “security” yet balked at not cutting defense
spending.

He went on to
attack Ryan about cutting $300 million embassy security in his budget.We would need proof of that before taking
Biden’s word on it.Was it $300 million
in security or was it $300 million in other expenses, such as extravagant
dinner parties and posh homes for the ambassadors?Was it because Ryan suggested private
contractors could do the job better?Ryan should have been prepared for this allegation and answered it.

If we take the
Shakespearean analysis of the debate and begin with the first and last words of
each, we find Biden making promises he can’t keep.“We will find and bring to justice the men
who did this.”And probably let them go
if they’re found to be affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood. "Whatever mistakes were made will not be made
again.”

Four men were
murdered due to our government’s negligence.America should take those words as their own solemn oath and not make the
mistake, again, of electing president a man who clearly does not have America’s
best interests, to say nothing of her national security and certainly not that
of her allies, at heart.

Biden’s first
words:

BIDEN:What is was, it was a tragedy, Martha. It —
Chris Stevens was one of our best. We lost three other brave Americans.I can make
absolutely two commitments to you and all the American people tonight. One, we
will find and bring to justice the men who did this. And secondly, we will get
to the bottom of it, and whatever — wherever the facts lead us, wherever they
lead us, we will make clear to the American public, because whatever mistakes
were made will not be made again.

Biden accused
Mitt Romney of being an irresponsible liar for talking about the video before
anyone knew the facts.But the facts
proved Romney right.Why did it take
Obama two weeks to come to the conclusion that it was a terrorist attack?Shouldn’t a President of the United States be
just a little better informed?Even the
Libyan president asserted that the attack had nothing to do with that video.

In contrast, these were Ryan’s first words:

RYAN: We mourn the loss of these four Americans who
were murdered.When you take a look at
what has happened just in the last few weeks, they sent the U.N. ambassador out
to say that this was because of a protest and a YouTube video. It took the
president two weeks to acknowledge that this was a terrorist attack.He went to the U.N. and in his speech at the
U.N. he said six times — he talked about the YouTube video.Look, if we’re hit by terrorists we’re going
to call it for what it is, a terrorist attack. Our ambassador in Paris has a
Marine detachment guarding him. Shouldn’t we have a Marine detachment guarding
our ambassador in Benghazi, a place where we knew that there was an Al Qaida
cell with arms?

These were Biden’s
last words in the debate:

BIDEN:All they’re [the American people] looking
for, Martha, all they’re looking for is an even shot. Whenever you give them
the shot, they’ve done it. They’ve done it. Whenever you’ve leveled the playing
field, they’ve been able to move. And
they want a little bit of peace of mind.

And the
president and I are not going to rest until that playing field is leveled,
they, in fact, have a clear shot, and they have peace of mind, until they can
turn to their kid and say with a degree of confidence, “Honey, it’s going to be
OK. It’s going to be OK.” That’s what this is all about.

If leveling the
playing field is “what this is all about,” then America is in serious
trouble.It’s never been what America is
all about – taking from the taxpayers and giving to the poor.As Ryan correctly pointed out (as pundits
have done before him), that taxing all the millionaires in the country at 100
percent still wouldn’t solve the plight of the poor.Redistribution of wealth will never solve the
plight of the poor.

Ryan’s last
words, in contrast, were:

RYAN:We face a very big choice. What kind of
country are we going to be? What kind of country are we going to give our kids?
President Obama, he had his chance. He made his choices. His economic agenda,
more spending, more borrowing, higher taxes, a government takeover of health
care. It’s not working. It’s failed to create the jobs we need.

Twenty-three
million Americans are struggling for work today. Fifteen percent of Americans
are in poverty. This is not what a real recovery looks like. You deserve
better. Mitt Romney and I want to earn your support. We’re offering real
reforms for a real recovery for every American.

Mitt
Romney — his experience, his ideas, his solutions — is uniquely qualified to
get this job done. At a time when we have a jobs crisis in America, wouldn’t it
be nice to have a job-creator in the White House?

The
choice is clear: a stagnant economy that promotes more government dependency or
a dynamic, growing economy that promotes opportunity and jobs. Mitt Romney and
I will not duck the tough issues, and we will not blame others for the next
four years. We will take responsibility. And we will not try to replace our
founding principles. We will reapply our founding principles.

Last night’s
debate illustrates how absolutely vital it is to have a strong vice president
standing ready to take the reins in the event of some unfortunate occurrence.You have to be able to depend upon the man
who takes that chair, that he has the best interests of the country.You have to have as much confidence in him,
and he has to be as fully vetted as the man elected president so you can rely
on your next commander-in-chief.You
know who he is where he came from, who he is, and you know his heart.Last night was an example of the poor vetting
of the pair who occupy the highest offices in the land currently.

Libya proves that
Obama was not running things.He was in
Las Vegas, campaigning.So who was running
the show?We need a commander-in-chief,
not a campaigner-in-chief.Nor do we
need a nasty joker standing in the wings in case something happens to him,
making a jackass of himself and our country.

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Who's the Real Puppet?

“I’m sorry, Jim.I’m going to stop the subsidy to PBS.I’m going to stop other things. I like PBS. I
love Big Bird. I actually like you, too [to moderator Jim Lehrer],” he said to
Mr. Lehrer. “But I’m not going to keep on spending money on things to borrow money
from China to pay for it,” Mitt Romney, Oct. 4, 2012 Presidential Debate.

With
less than a month to go until the presidential elections, with a scandal and a
cover-up involving a dead U.S. ambassador and unheeded requests for increased
security at the Libyan embassy, with the Muslim Brotherhood taking over Egypt,
with Syria’s dictator Assad murdering thousands of Syrians, with the whole
Middle East about to go up in flames, with our economy still teetering on the
brink despite an amazing unemployment report that, for the first time in
history, shows a decrease in unemployment, a deficit of $1.1 trillion, why are
we having this conversation about a big, yellow puppet?

Why
aren’t we having a conversation about the Government Accountability Institute’s
109-page report on allegations of campaign donor fraud in the Obama
campaign?Maybe we aren’t having the
conversation because Obama is the real puppet.Perhaps that’s why he couldn’t deliver any good counter-arguments to
Mitt Romney’s more credible assertions that he can turn our economy around.

Big
Bird knows more about making money than Obama does.Big Bird may have started out on the public
dole, but according to Peter Grier, of DecoderWire.com, our feathered friend
and his pals on Sesame Street now only receive about 8 percent of their total
budget from the government.Sesame
Street’s total budget is $130 million.That’s a lot of bird seed, only $10.4 million of which comes from the
taxpayer.

The
Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which includes PBS (Public Broadcasting
System) under its wing, receives $445 million in taxpayer support.That money brings us a lot of great English
programming like Downington Abbey (an update of the old Upstairs, Downstairs
series) and Foyle’s War, about a British detective in World War II.Some of PBS’ money comes from corporate
grants as well.Yes, those evil
corporations who are playing us for suckers provide us with some of the best
programming running through the cables, hardly any of which is produced in
America.

Sesame Street, according to Grier, receives 35
percent of its funding from private, corporate, and public (government)
grants.The rest is station fees, and merchandising.Another 33 percent comes from product
licensing and 32 percent comes from distribution fees and royalties.The government’s role actually is all that
great.In other words, Big Bird is more
than capable of taking care of himself.1

The GAI
report tells us how much money Obama has received from private donors.Quite a bit, it seems.In 2008, he raised over $335 million in
donations.Supposedly, he has outspent
Romney in this campaign by $200 million.The report tells us that credit card thieves steal your credit number –
not the card itself, just the number – and use it to make donations to Obama’s
campaign.People may have charges on
their card and thieves depend upon consumers to not do due diligence and check
their credit card statements each month.

Yet,
the president spent some of that money defending Big Bird in a recent campaign commercial,
which was very funny, but a needless distraction.Adults should be paying more attention to how
Sesame Street was created and what the Corporation for Public Broadcasting
funds besides Sesame Street and Jim Lehrer’s program.

Obama
is no one to talk about a feathered puppet who worked his way off of public
welfare.He has his own explaining to do
and less than 30 days to do it.It’s
time to let poor Big Bird get back to his job of teaching kids their ABCs and
time for Obama to explain how he’s feathered his own nest.

Jiggering the Jobs Numbers

Don't you just love October Surprises? They're as predictable as the falling leaves. Just like magic, and just in time for tonight’s vice presidential debate, the Bureau of Labor Statistics report stated that the unemployment rate declined to 7.8 percent due to a surprise spurt of 873,000 jobs, as reported by the separate Household Survey of families across the nation.

According to Forbes magazine, the BLS “also reported on Friday that the number of full-time jobsdeclined by 216,000 last month, as Lott also noted. The unemployment rate declined to 7.8% only because of a reported surprise September spurt of 873,000 jobs in the separate Household Survey of families across the nation. That reported increase is anomalous for the reasons discussed below.”

There’s a big “but”with these numbers: the working age population.Last month, 206,000 new workers entered the work force. With two-thirds of those working as would be expected during a normal recovery, 138,000 new jobs would have been necessary in September just to keep pace with population growth.Move up http://i.forbesimg.com tMove down

In fact, 8.4 million new workers have entered the work force since Obama entered office. With the same labor force participation as on Inauguration Day in January, 2009 (which would be closer to a real recovery), that, according to Forbes, would require 5.5 million new jobs just to keep up with the population growth.

“But a generous reading of the data is that during President Obama’s entire term in office, a grand total of only 787,000 jobs have been created overall on net. And all of that net growth came in the last month. As of August, 2012, the economy was still suffering a net loss of jobs during Obama’s entire Presidency up to that point.

“But even the actually story the BLS is telling is not good. In addition to all of the above, the supposed September increase in Household Survey jobs was mostly in what the BLS calls part-time work for economic reasons. The BLS explains, ‘These individuals were working part time because theirhours had been cut back or because they were unable to find a full-time job.’ That applied to 582,000 of the supposed new jobs reported by the September Household Survey, and a total of 8.6 million Americans last month.”

Blogger Tyler Durden notes on zerohedge.com:

“After expectations of a rebound in initial claims from 367K last week (naturally revised higher

to 369K), to 370K (with the lowest of all sellside expectations at 355K), the past week

mysteriously, yet so very unsurprisingly in the aftermath of the fudged BLS unemployment

number, saw claims tumble to a number that is so ridiculous not even CNBC’s Steve Liesman

bothered defending it, or 339K. Ironically, not even the Labor Department is defending it: it

said that ‘one large state didn't report some quarterly figures.”Great, but what was reported

was a headline grabbing number that is just stunning for reelection purposes. This was the

lowest number since 2008. The only point to [publishing this misinformation]? For 2-3 bulletin

talking points at the Vice Presidential debate tonight. Everything else is now noise.

“It is also sad that the U.S.“economy” has devolved to such trivial data fudging on a week by

week basis, which makes even the Chinese Department of Truth appear amateurish by

“When deriving the “part time for economic reasons” number, BLS asks respondents how many

hours they worked in a specific week. If they worked anywhere in between 1 and 35 hours in

that week, then they are deemed “part time.”This question produced the 582,000 spike in

September. In a separate question, BLS asks respondents if they usually work full or part time.

This is where the-26,000 total decline in part time work came from.

“So if a respondent normally works full time as a contractor, but for the specific week BLS is

studying, that person worked less than 35 hours because he couldn’t find enough work, that

person would be counted as both full time for one part of the survey and “part time for

economic reasons” for another part of the survey.

3.Government employment is growing

"You won’t hear President Obama tout this fact on the campaign trail, but one of the strongest

sectors of job growth in the September household survey was from government jobs. Of the

838,000 full time jobs the household survey claims were added in September, almost

one-quarter, 187,000, came from the government. Even the employer survey showed some

government job growth, albeit a twentieth the size (just 10,000).”

If this is what the experts think, and if the likes of Steve Forbes and Jack Welch (former CEO of

General Electric) are telling us that the numbers are phony, we need to let our friends know before tonight’s debate, for certainly these numbers were pumped up for the express purpose of Joe Biden using them to sound victory for Obama’s economic policies.It’s the ammunition he needs.

During World War II, German bombs were often made by slave labor.The slaves were not above

sabotaging the bombs (so that they didn’t explode on impact) in order to thwart their evil masters. If Paul Ryan can defuse this October Surprise bomb and expose the numbers contained within as a dud, he’ll stand a better chance of winning the debate.

Undoubtedly, being the economics expert that he is, Ryan knows the truth about the numbers. The

Americans (who bother) watching tonight may not.Those who rely on news accounts of the debate the

next day certainly will not.Forbes Magazine, Jack Welch, Rush Limbaugh, Mr. Carroll, and young

Mr. Durden here and others have been indispensable in providing us the facts, which we might not

otherwise have. Our task is to further dispense that information to our family and friends for tonight’s vice

presidential debate.

Many pundits have declared that the numbers were too good to be true, historically unlikely, and their

publication just before a major vice presidential debate suspect.Now we have the facts and the

explanation behind them.

The math has been done and the real numbers don’t lie.Time for us to start spreading the truth,

Tea Partiers.

Move up http://i.forbesimg.com tMove down

In fact, 8.4 million new workers have entered the work force since Obama
entered office. With the same labor force participation as on Inauguration Day
in January, 2009 (which would be closer to a real recovery), that, according to
Forbes, would require 5.5 million new jobs just to keep up with the population
growth.

“But a generous reading of the data is that during President Obama’s entire
term in office, a grand total of only 787,000 jobs have been created overall on
net. And all of that net growth came in the last month. As of August, 2012, the
economy was still suffering a net loss of jobs during Obama’s entire Presidency
up to that point.

“But even the actually story the BLS is telling is not good. In addition to
all of the above, the supposed September increase in Household Survey jobs
was mostly in what the BLS calls part-time work for economic reasons. The BLS
explains, ‘These individuals were working part time because their hours had
been cut back or because they were unable to find a full-time job.’ That
applied to 582,000 of the supposed new jobs reported by the September Household
Survey, and a total of 8.6 million Americans last month.”

Blogger Tyler Durden notes on zerohedge.com:

After expectations of a
rebound in initial claims from 367K last week (naturally revised higher to
369K), to 370K (with the lowest of all sellside expectations at 355K), the past
week mysteriously, yet so very unsurprisingly in the aftermath of the fudged
BLS unemployment number, saw claims tumble to a number that is so ridiculous
not even CNBC’s Steve Liesman bothered defending it, or 339K. Ironically, not even the Labor Department is
defending it: it said that ‘one large state didn't report some quarterly
figures.” Great, but what was reported was a headline grabbing number that
is just stunning for reelection purposes. This was the lowest number since
2008. The only point to [publish this misinformation]? For 2-3 bulletin talking
points at the Vice Presidential debate tonight. Everything else is now noise.

It is also sad that the U.S.
“economy” has devolved to such trivial data fudging on a week by week basis, which
makes even the Chinese Department of Truth appear amateurish by comparison.
Needless to say, Not Seasonally Adjusted initial claims jumped by 26K to
327K in the past week, but who’s counting.

Finally, what is the reason
for ongoing QEternity if the employment situation is now back to normal?
Finally, in completely ignored news, because who needs global trade when you
have toner cartridge, and generally [red] ink, the U.S. trade deficit in August
rose by 4.1 percent to $44.2 billion, on expectations of a deterioration to
$44.0 billion. Then again nobody talks about the U.S. trade deficit during
presidential debates so all good here.

Jobless Claims beat by the
most since May 2009 and is the lowest since Jan 2008 - the new normal...

Finally, there’s this from Conn Carroll in an
editorial in the Washington Examiner;

Ever since the economy became the focus
of the 2012 presidential election, interest in the Labor Department’s monthly jobs report has never been
higher. This election season, on the first Friday of every month, political
observers across the country are frantically hitting the refresh button on
their browsers to get the latest jobs numbers. And the last report, released on
October the 5th, was a doozy.

It reported that while U.S. employers
said they created just 114,000 jobs in September, 873,000 Americans claimed to
have gotten new jobs in that same month. Only three other jobs reports in the
history of the Labor Department had a larger gap between the employer and
household survey. Here are some
other facts about last Friday’s historic jobs report.

1.The
economy is not getting stronger

“The right message is that on Friday, we saw great
economic news,” Brian Moran, the chairman of the Virginia Democratic Party,
told The New York
Times. “Things are moving in the right direction.”

Only if you think declining job growth
is “the right direction” can you interpret the recent job report as “great
economic news.” The reality is that according to employer survey,
the economy has been creating just 106k jobs a month over the last six months.
That’s compared to the 194k job a month clip from the six months before and it
is just barely above the 100k jobs a month the Atlanta
Federal Reserve says we need to keep up with population growth.

But what about the 873,000 Americans who
said they got new jobs last month? Doesn’t that prove the economy is getting
better? No. No, it doesn’t. That 873,000 number comes from the Current Population Survey,
which is conducted by the Census Bureau for the Labor Department’s Bureau of
Labor and Statistics. The CPS is famously volatile and far less reliable an
indicator of economic conditions than the employer survey (called the Current Employment Statistics
survey).

But even considering the usually
unstable nature of the CPS, this September’s CPS report is particularly
unreflective of reality. Wells Fargo called the September household survey “a
black swan outlier” and noted that the 873,000 job gain “was more than four
times the size of the average change over the past 12 months.” Gallup‘s
Chief Economist Dennis Jacobe said the CPS 873,000 job gain “seems to lack
face-validity.”

When deriving the “part time for
economic reasons” number, BLS asks respondents how many hours they worked in a
specific week. If they worked anywhere
in between 1 and 35 hours in that week, then they are deemed “part time.” This
question produced the 582,000 spike in September. In a separate question, BLS
asks respondents if they usually work full or part time. This is where the
-26,000 total decline in part time work came from.

So if a respondent normally works full
time as a contractor, but for the specific week BLS is studying, that person
worked less than 35 hours because he couldn’t find enough work, that person
would be counted as both full time for one part of the survey and “part time
for economic reasons” for another part of the survey.

3.Government
employment is growing

You won’t hear President Obama tout this
fact on the campaign trail, but one of the strongest sectors of job growth in
the September household survey was from government jobs. Of the 838,000 full
time jobs the household survey claims were added in September, almost
one-quarter, 187,000, came from the government. Even the employer survey showed
some government job growth, albeit a twentieth the size (just 10,000).

If this is what the experts think, and if the
likes of Steve Forbes and Jack Welch (former CEO of General Electric) are
telling us that the numbers are phony, we need to let our friends know before
tonight’s debate, for certainly these numbers were pumped up for the express
purpose of Joe Biden using them to sound victory for Obama’s economic policies.It’s the ammunition he needs.

During World War II, German bombs were often
made by slave labor.The slaves were not
above sabotaging the bombs (so that they didn’t explode on impact) in order to
thwart their evil masters.If Paul Ryan
can defuse this October surprise bomb and expose the numbers contained within
as a dud, he’ll stand a better chance of winning the debate.

Undoubtedly, being the economics expert that
he is, Ryan knows the truth about the numbers.The Americans (who bother) watching tonight may not.Those who rely on news accounts of the debate
the next day certainly will not.Forbes
Magazine, Jack Welch, Rush Limbaugh, Mr. Carroll, and young Mr. Durden here and
others have been indispensable in providing us the facts, which we might not
otherwise have.Our task is to further
dispense that information to our family and friends for tonight’s vice
presidential debate.

Many pundits have declared that the numbers
were too good to be true, historically unlikely, and their publication just
before a major vice presidential debate suspect.Now we have the facts and the explanation.

The math has been done and the real numbers
don’t lie.Time for us to start
spreading the truth, Tea Partiers.

Move up http://i.forbesimg.com tMove down

In fact, 8.4 million new workers have entered the work force since Obama
entered office. With the same labor force participation as on Inauguration Day
in January, 2009 (which would be closer to a real recovery), that, according to
Forbes, would require 5.5 million new jobs just to keep up with the population
growth.

“But a generous reading of the data is that during President Obama’s entire
term in office, a grand total of only 787,000 jobs have been created overall on
net. And all of that net growth came in the last month. As of August, 2012, the
economy was still suffering a net loss of jobs during Obama’s entire Presidency
up to that point.

“But even the actually story the BLS is telling is not good. In addition to
all of the above, the supposed September increase in Household Survey jobs
was mostly in what the BLS calls part-time work for economic reasons. The BLS
explains, ‘These individuals were working part time because their hours had
been cut back or because they were unable to find a full-time job.’ That
applied to 582,000 of the supposed new jobs reported by the September Household
Survey, and a total of 8.6 million Americans last month.”

Blogger Tyler Durden notes on zerohedge.com:

After expectations of a
rebound in initial claims from 367K last week (naturally revised higher to
369K), to 370K (with the lowest of all sellside expectations at 355K), the past
week mysteriously, yet so very unsurprisingly in the aftermath of the fudged
BLS unemployment number, saw claims tumble to a number that is so ridiculous
not even CNBC’s Steve Liesman bothered defending it, or 339K. Ironically, not even the Labor Department is
defending it: it said that ‘one large state didn't report some quarterly
figures.” Great, but what was reported was a headline grabbing number that
is just stunning for reelection purposes. This was the lowest number since
2008. The only point to [publish this misinformation]? For 2-3 bulletin talking
points at the Vice Presidential debate tonight. Everything else is now noise.

It is also sad that the U.S.
“economy” has devolved to such trivial data fudging on a week by week basis, which
makes even the Chinese Department of Truth appear amateurish by comparison.
Needless to say, Not Seasonally Adjusted initial claims jumped by 26K to
327K in the past week, but who’s counting.

Finally, what is the reason
for ongoing QEternity if the employment situation is now back to normal?
Finally, in completely ignored news, because who needs global trade when you
have toner cartridge, and generally [red] ink, the U.S. trade deficit in August
rose by 4.1 percent to $44.2 billion, on expectations of a deterioration to
$44.0 billion. Then again nobody talks about the U.S. trade deficit during
presidential debates so all good here.

Jobless Claims beat by the
most since May 2009 and is the lowest since Jan 2008 - the new normal...

Finally, there’s this from Conn Carroll in an
editorial in the Washington Examiner;

Ever since the economy became the focus
of the 2012 presidential election, interest in the Labor Department’s monthly jobs report has never been
higher. This election season, on the first Friday of every month, political
observers across the country are frantically hitting the refresh button on
their browsers to get the latest jobs numbers. And the last report, released on
October the 5th, was a doozy.

It reported that while U.S. employers
said they created just 114,000 jobs in September, 873,000 Americans claimed to
have gotten new jobs in that same month. Only three other jobs reports in the
history of the Labor Department had a larger gap between the employer and
household survey. Here are some
other facts about last Friday’s historic jobs report.

1.The
economy is not getting stronger

“The right message is that on Friday, we saw great
economic news,” Brian Moran, the chairman of the Virginia Democratic Party,
told The New York
Times. “Things are moving in the right direction.”

Only if you think declining job growth
is “the right direction” can you interpret the recent job report as “great
economic news.” The reality is that according to employer survey,
the economy has been creating just 106k jobs a month over the last six months.
That’s compared to the 194k job a month clip from the six months before and it
is just barely above the 100k jobs a month the Atlanta
Federal Reserve says we need to keep up with population growth.

But what about the 873,000 Americans who
said they got new jobs last month? Doesn’t that prove the economy is getting
better? No. No, it doesn’t. That 873,000 number comes from the Current Population Survey,
which is conducted by the Census Bureau for the Labor Department’s Bureau of
Labor and Statistics. The CPS is famously volatile and far less reliable an
indicator of economic conditions than the employer survey (called the Current Employment Statistics
survey).

But even considering the usually
unstable nature of the CPS, this September’s CPS report is particularly
unreflective of reality. Wells Fargo called the September household survey “a
black swan outlier” and noted that the 873,000 job gain “was more than four
times the size of the average change over the past 12 months.” Gallup‘s
Chief Economist Dennis Jacobe said the CPS 873,000 job gain “seems to lack
face-validity.”

When deriving the “part time for
economic reasons” number, BLS asks respondents how many hours they worked in a
specific week. If they worked anywhere
in between 1 and 35 hours in that week, then they are deemed “part time.” This
question produced the 582,000 spike in September. In a separate question, BLS
asks respondents if they usually work full or part time. This is where the
-26,000 total decline in part time work came from.

So if a respondent normally works full
time as a contractor, but for the specific week BLS is studying, that person
worked less than 35 hours because he couldn’t find enough work, that person
would be counted as both full time for one part of the survey and “part time
for economic reasons” for another part of the survey.

3.Government
employment is growing

You won’t hear President Obama tout this
fact on the campaign trail, but one of the strongest sectors of job growth in
the September household survey was from government jobs. Of the 838,000 full
time jobs the household survey claims were added in September, almost
one-quarter, 187,000, came from the government. Even the employer survey showed
some government job growth, albeit a twentieth the size (just 10,000).

If this is what the experts think, and if the
likes of Steve Forbes and Jack Welch (former CEO of General Electric) are
telling us that the numbers are phony, we need to let our friends know before
tonight’s debate, for certainly these numbers were pumped up for the express
purpose of Joe Biden using them to sound victory for Obama’s economic policies.It’s the ammunition he needs.

During World War II, German bombs were often
made by slave labor.The slaves were not
above sabotaging the bombs (so that they didn’t explode on impact) in order to
thwart their evil masters.If Paul Ryan
can defuse this October surprise bomb and expose the numbers contained within
as a dud, he’ll stand a better chance of winning the debate.

Undoubtedly, being the economics expert that
he is, Ryan knows the truth about the numbers.The Americans (who bother) watching tonight may not.Those who rely on news accounts of the debate
the next day certainly will not.Forbes
Magazine, Jack Welch, Rush Limbaugh, Mr. Carroll, and young Mr. Durden here and
others have been indispensable in providing us the facts, which we might not
otherwise have.Our task is to further
dispense that information to our family and friends for tonight’s vice
presidential debate.

Many pundits have declared that the numbers
were too good to be true, historically unlikely, and their publication just
before a major vice presidential debate suspect.Now we have the facts and the explanation.

The math has been done and the real numbers
don’t lie.Time for us to start
spreading the truth, Tea Partiers.